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Korean People's Army
  • 조선인민군
  • transliteration: Chosŏn inmin'gun
Flag of the Korean People's Army
Flag of the Korean People's Army.
FoundedApril 25, 1932[1]
Current formFebruary 8, 1948
Service branches
HeadquartersPyongyang, North Korea
Leadership
Marshal Kim Jong-un
General Jang Jong-nam
General Ri Yong-gil
Personnel
Conscription17 years of age
Available for
military service
6,515,279 males, age 17-49 (2010),
6,418,693 females, age 17-49 (2010)
Fit for
military service
4,836,567 males, age 17-49 (2010),
5,230,137 females, age 17-49 (2010)
Reaching military
age annually
207,737 males (2010),
204,553 females (2010)
Active personnel1,106,000 (2010) (ranked 5th)[2]
Reserve personnel8,200,000 (2010) (ranked 1st)
Expenditure
Budget~$10 billion[3][4][5]
Percent of GDP~25.0%
Industry
Domestic suppliers
Annual exports$ 100.000+ million
Related articles
RanksComparative military ranks of Korea
Korean People's Army
Chosŏn'gŭl
조선인민군
Hancha
朝鮮人民軍
Revised RomanizationJoseon Inmingun
McCune–ReischauerChosŏn Inmingun

The Korean People's Army (KPA; Chosŏn'gŭl: 조선인민군; Chosŏn inmin'gun) constitutes the military forces of North Korea. Kim Jong-un is the Supreme Commander of the Korean People's Army and Chairman of the National Defence Commission. The KPA consists of five branches, Ground Force, the Navy, the Air Force, the Strategic Rocket Forces, and the Special Operation Force. Also, the Worker-Peasant Red Guards come under control of the KPA.

In 1971, Kim Il-sung directed that "Military Foundation Day" be changed from 8 February to 25 April, the nominal day of establishment of his anti-Japanese guerrilla army in 1932, to recognize the supposedly indigenous Korean origins of the KPA and obscure its Soviet origin.[1] An active arms industry had been developed to produce long-range missiles such as the Nodong-1.[6]

The KPA faces its primary adversaries, the Republic of Korea Armed Forces and United States Forces Korea, across the Korean Demilitarized Zone, as it has since the Armistice Agreement of July 1953. As of 2013, with 9,495,000 active, reserve, and paramilitary personnel, it is the largest military organization on earth.[7] This number represents nearly 40% of the population,[8] and is the numeric equivalent of the entire population between ages 20 and 45.[9]

History

The Korean People's Army history began with the Korean Volunteer Army (KVA), which was formed in Yenan, China, in 1939. The two individuals responsible for the army were Kim Tu-bong and Mu Chong. At the same time, a school was established near Yenan for training military and political leaders for a future independent Korea. By 1945, the KVA had grown to approximately 1,000 men, mostly Korean deserters from the Imperial Japanese Army. During this period, the KVA fought alongside the Chinese communist forces from which it drew its arms and ammunition. After the defeat of the Japanese, the KVA accompanied the Chinese communist forces into Manchuria, intending to gain recruits from the Korean population of Manchuria and then enter Korea. By September 1945, the KVA had a 2,500 strong force at its disposal.

Just after World War II and during the Soviet Union's occupation of the part of Korea north of the 38th Parallel, the Soviet 25th Army headquarters in Pyongyang issued a statement ordering all armed resistance groups in the northern part of the peninsula to disband on October 12, 1945. Two thousand Koreans with previous experience in the Soviet army were sent to various locations around the country to organize constabulary forces with permission from Soviet military headquarters, and the force was created on October 21, 1945.

The headquarters felt a need for a separate unit for security around railways, and the formation of the unit was announced on January 11, 1946. That unit was activated on August 15 of the same year to supervise existing security forces and creation of the national armed forces.

The first political-military school in the DPRK, the Pyongyang Military Academy (became No. 2 KPA Officers School in January 1949), headed by Kim Chaek, an ally of Kim Il-sung, was founded in October 1945 under Soviet guidance to train people's guards, or public security units. In 1946, graduates of the school entered regular police and public security/constabulary units. These lightly armed security forces included followers of Kim Il-sung and returned veterans from the People's Republic of China, and the Central Constabulary Academy (which became the KPA Military Academy in December 1948) soon followed for education of political and military officers for the new armed forces.

After the military was organized and facilities to educate its new recruits were constructed, the Constabulary Discipline Corps was reorganized into the Korean People's Army General Headquarters. The previously semi-official units became military regulars with distribution of Soviet uniforms, badges, and weapons that followed the inception of the headquarters.

The State Security Department, a forerunner to the Ministry of People's Defense, was created as part of the Interim People's Committee on February 4, 1948. The formal creation of the Korean People's Army was announced on four days later on February 8, the day after the Fourth Plenary Session of the People’s Assembly approved the plan to separate the roles of the military and those of the police,[10] seven months before the government of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea was proclaimed on September 9, 1948. In addition, the Ministry of State for the People's Armed Forces was established, which controlled a central guard battalion, two divisions, and an independent mixed and combined arms brigade.

Conflicts and events

A monument in Pyongyang, depicting North Korean airmen and a MiG fighter.

Before the outbreak of the Korean War, Joseph Stalin equipped the KPA with modern tanks, trucks, artillery, and small arms (at the time, the South Korean Army had nothing remotely comparable either in numbers of troops or equipment). During the opening phases of the Korean War in 1950, the KPA quickly drove South Korean forces south and captured Seoul, only to lose 70,000 of their 100,000-strong army in the autumn after U.S. amphibious landings at the Battle of Incheon and a subsequent drive to the Yalu River. The KPA subsequently played a secondary minor role to Chinese forces in the remainder of the conflict. By the time of the Armistice in 1953, the KPA had sustained 290,000 casualties and lost 90,000 men as POWs.

In 1953, the Military Armistice Commission (MAC) was able to oversee and enforce the terms of the armistice. The Neutral Nations Supervisory Commission (NNSC), originally made up of delegations from Poland, Czechoslovakia and Hungary on the Communist side, and Sweden and Switzerland on the United Nations side, monitored the activities of the MAC.

In the early 1970s, following the lead of Soviet military leaders and theorists who were rediscovering and beginning to apply the 1920s–1930s thinking of Soviet military theorists Alexander Svechin, Mikhail Tukhachevsky, Vladimir Triandafillov, and others on operational art and “deep operations,” the Soviet-trained officers of the KPA were developing their version, termed “Two Front War.”[11] As they envisioned it, a very large conventional force, greatly reinforced with artillery, armor, and mechanized forces, employing surprise, speed, and shock, would break through the DMZ, envelop and destroy South Korean forward forces, and rapidly overrun the entire peninsula.

During the 1970s, senior KPA officers writing in official journals echoed Soviet military thinking as they characterized the nature of modern warfare as three-dimensional, with no distinction between front and rear, highly mobile, and increasingly dependent upon mechanization, task organization, and improved engineer capabilities. These articles presaged dramatic increases in mechanized and truck-mobile infantry and self-propelled artillery battalions and ultimately a major expansion, reorganization, and redeployment forward of KPA ground forces. In parallel with this, however, Soviet thinking on the strategic scale was replaced since December 1962 with a people's war concept. The Soviet idea of direct warfare was replaced with a Maoist war of attrition strategy. Along with the mechanization of some infantry units, more emphasis was put on light weapons, high-angle indirect fire, night fighting, and sea denial.[12]

Organization

North Korean soldier, 2005.

Until 1987, most sources claimed the army had two armored divisions.[13] These divisions disappeared from the order of battle and were replaced by the armored corps and a doubling of the armored brigade count. In the mid-1980s, the heavy caliber self-propelled artillery was consolidated into the first multibrigade artillery corps. At the same time, the restructured mobile exploitation forces were redeployed forward, closer to the DMZ. The forward corps areas of operation were compressed although their internal organization appeared to remain basically the same. The deployment of the newly formed mechanized, armored, and artillery corps directly behind the first echelon conventional forces provides a potent exploitation force that did not exist prior to 1980.

As of 1992, the army was composed of sixteen corps commands, two separate special operations forces commands, and nine military district commands (or regions) under the control of the Ministry of the People's Armed Forces. Most sources agreed that the DPRK's ground forces consisted of approximately 145 divisions and brigades, of which approximately 120 are active. There is less agreement, however, on the breakdown of the forces below the division and brigade levels.

As of 1996, major combat units consisted of 153 divisions and brigades, including 60 infantry divisions/brigades, 25 mechanized infantry brigades, 13 tank brigades, 25 Special Operation Force (SOF) brigades and 30 artillery brigades.[14] North Korea deployed ten corps including sixty divisions and brigades in the forward area south of the Pyongyang-Wonsan line.

Commission and leadership

The primary path for command and control of the KPA extends through the National Defense Commission which was led by its chairman Kim Jong-il until 2011, to the Ministry of People's Armed Forces and its General Staff Department.[15] From there on, command and control flows to the various bureaus and operational units. A secondary path, to ensure political control of the military establishment, extends through the Workers' Party of Korea's Central Military Commission of the Workers' Party of Korea.

Since 1990, numerous and dramatic transformations within the DPRK have led to the current command and control structure. The details of the majority of these changes are simply unknown to the world. What little is known indicates that many changes were the natural result of the deaths of the aging leadership including Kim Il-sung (July 1994), Minister of People's Armed Forces O Chin-u (February 1995) and Minister of People's Armed Forces Choi Kwang (February 1997).

The vast majority of changes were undertaken to secure the power and position of Kim Jong-il. Formerly the National Defence Commission was part of the Central People's Committee while the Ministry of the People's Armed Forces, from 1982 onward, was under direct presidential control. At the Eighteenth session of the sixth Central People's Committee, held on May 23, 1990, the NDC became established as its own independent commission, rising to the same status as the CPC (now the Cabinet) and not subordinated to it, as was the case before. Concurrent with this, Kim Jong-il was appointed first vice-chairman of the National Defense Commission. The following year, on 24 December 1991, Kim Jong-il was appointed Supreme Commander of the Korean People's Army. Four months later, on 20 April 1992, Kim Jong-il was awarded the rank of Marshal and his father, in virtue of being the KPA's founding commander in chief, became Grand Marshal as a result and one year later he became the Chairman of the National Defense Commission, by now under Supreme People's Assembly control under the then 1992 constitution as amended.

Within the KPA, between December 1991 and December 1995, nearly 800 high officers (out of approximately 1,200) received promotions and preferential assignments. Three days after Kim Jong-il became Marshal, eight generals were appointed to the rank of Vice-Marshal. In April 1997, on the 85th anniversary of Kim Il-sung's birthday, Kim Jong-il promoted 127 general grade officers. The following April he ordered the promotions of another 22 generals. Along with these changes many KPA officers were appointed to influential positions within the Korean Workers' Party. These promotions continue today, simultaneous with the celebration of Kim Il-sung's birthday and the KPA anniversary celebrations every April. Under Kim Jong-il's leadership, political officers dispatched from the party monitored every move of a general’s daily life, according to analysts[16] similar to the work of Soviet political commissars during the early and middle years of the military establishment.

Conscription and terms of service

Korean People's Army soldiers

North Korea has universal conscription for males and selective conscription for females with many pre- and post-service requirements. North Korea has a mandatory service that ranges between 3 and 5 years. Article 86 of the North Korean Constitution states, "Defending the fatherland is the supreme duty and honor of citizens. Citizens shall defend the fatherland and serve in the armed forces as prescribed by law". Long before Kim Jong-il instituted "military-first" politics as his governing strategy, an individual was able to improve one’s status through service in the Military. However, not everybody is able to join the Army. North Korea maintains a universal draft and excludes those who are not physically able to perform, as do all other militaries. However, North Korea also excludes individuals based on their social-political background.

Those who receive military training must be unconditionally loyal to the Party, and those perceived as enemies of the state are not permitted to possess a weapon. In determining service eligibility in the Korean People’s Army, "Songbun" in effect determines a person’s lifelong career as well. If one serves in the military, one goes through three levels of investigation by three different internal security agencies where Songbun is a central consideration in each investigation.

After entering military service, the Korean People’s Army Military Security Command begins a new file in a process parallel to the MPS investigation process and at the same time processes an identification card. The military identification card is distinct from the civilian citizen registration card that all North Koreans carry. After leaving the military and being assigned to a civilian occupation, the local MPS and SSD receive copies of the songbun file from the military which forwards the file through official Military Security Command-Ministry of People's Security-State Security Department channels.

KPA soldiers serve 10 years of military service in the KPA, which also runs its own factories, farms and trading arms.[16]

Paramilitary organizations

The Young Red Guards are the youth cadet corps of the KPA for secondary level and university level students. Every Saturday, they hold mandatory 4-hour military training drills, and have training activities on and off campus to prepare them for military service when they turn 18 or after graduation.

The Memorial of Soldiers at the Mansudae Grand Monument

Under the Ministry of People's Security and the wartime control of the Ministry of People's Armed Forces, and formerly the Korean People's Security Forces, the Korean People's Internal Security Forces forms the national gendarmerie and civil defense force of the KPA. The KPISF has its units in various fields like civil defense, traffic management, civil disturbance control, and local security. It has its own special forces units. The service shares the ranks of the KPA (with the exception of Marshals) but wears different uniforms.

Budget and commercial interests

The KPA's annual budget is approximately six billion USD. The U.S. Institute for Science and International Security reports that the DPRK may possess fissile material for around two to nine nuclear warheads.[17] The North Korean Songun ("Military First") policy elevates the KPA to the primary position in the government and society.

According to North Korea's state news agency, military expenditures for 2010 made up 15.8 percent of the state budget.[18] Most analyses of North Korea’s defense sector, however, estimate that defense spending constitutes between one-quarter and one-third of all government spending. As of 2003, according to the International Institute of Strategic Studies, North Korea’s defense budget consumed some 25 percent of central government spending.[19] In the mid-1970s and early 1980s, according to figures released by the Polish Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, between 32 and 38 percent of central government expenditures went towards defense.[20]

North Korea sells missiles and military equipment to many countries worldwide.[6] In April 2009, the United Nations named the Korea Mining and Development Trading Corporation (KOMID) as North Korea's primary arms dealer and main exporter of equipment related to ballistic missiles and conventional weapons. It also named Korea Ryonbong as a supporter of North Korea's military related sales.[21]

Historically, North Korea has assisted a vast number of revolutionary, insurgent and terrorist groups in more than 62 countries. A cumulative total of more than 5,000 foreign personnel have been trained in North Korea, and over 7,000 military advisers, primarily from the Reconnaissance Bureau, have been dispatched to some forty-seven countries. Some of the organisations which received North Korean aid include the Polisario Front, Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna, the Communist Party of Thailand, the Palestine Liberation Organization and the Army of the Guardians of the Islamic Revolution. The Zimbabwean Fifth Brigade received its initial training from KPA instructors.[22] North Korean troops allegedly saw combat during the Libyan-Egyptian War and the Angolan Civil War.[23] Up to 200 KPAF pilots took part in the Vietnam War,[24] scoring several kills against US aircraft.[25][26][27] Two KPA anti-aircraft artillery regiments were sent to North Vietnam as well.[28]

North Korean instructors trained Hezbollah fighters in guerilla warfare tactics around 2004, prior to the Second Lebanon War.[29] During the Syrian Civil War, Arabic-speaking KPA officers have assisted the Syrian Arab Army in military operations planning and have supervised artillery bombardments in the Aleppo area.[30]

Service branches

People's Ground Force

Koksan, one of North Korea's principal heavy artillery pieces. This example was captured in Iraq.

The Korean People's Army Ground Force (KPAGF) is the main branch of the Korean People's Army responsible for land-based military operations. It is the de facto army of North Korea. The size, organization, disposition, and combat capabilities of the Ground Force give Pyongyang military options both for offensive operations to reunify the peninsula and for credible defensive operations against any perceived threat from South Korea.

People's Navy

The Korean People's Navy is organized into two fleets which are not able to support each other. The East Fleet is headquartered at T'oejo-dong and the West Fleet at Nampho. A number of training, shipbuilding and maintenance units and a naval air wing report directly to Naval Command Headquarters at Pyongyang.[31] The majority of the navy's ships are assigned to the East Fleet. Due to the short range of most ships, the two fleets are not known to have ever conducted joint operations or shared vessels.[32]

People's Air Force and Defence

A former Indonesian Lim-5 on display in the United States in North Korean markings

The KPAF is also responsible for North Korea's air defence forces through the use of anti-aircraft artillery and surface-to-air (SAM) missiles. While much of the equipment is outdated, the high saturation of multilayered, overlapping, mutually supporting air defence sites provides a formidable challenge to enemy air attacks.[33]

People's Strategic Rocket Forces

The Korean People's Strategic Rocket Forces is a major division of the KPA that controls the DPRK's nuclear and conventional strategic missiles. It is mainly equipped with surface-to-surface missiles of Soviet and Chinese design, as well as locally developed long-range missiles.

Missile tests

1993
1998
2006
2009

Missiles

Taepodong-1
Taepodong-2

Worker-Peasant Red Guard Militia

The Red Guards (1997 complement 3.5 million) is the DPRK equivalent of an ROTC/Home Guard/National Guard/Territorial Army. It is regarded as a part of both the Ministry of National Defence and the National Defence Commission and its flag enjoys the same status as that of the other services. With units organized from University level down to the village level, it provides the Korean People's Armed Forces with a ready-available pool of trained reinforcements. As part of its responsibilities the WPRG also reports to the Workers' Party of Korea's Civil Defense Department.

Capabilities

Semi-submersible infiltration craft used by North Korean Special Forces [citation needed]

Although the North Korean military once enjoyed a startling advantage against its counterpart in South Korea, its relative isolation and economic plight starting from the 1980s has now tipped the balance of military power into the hands of the better-equipped South Korean military.[6] In response to this predicament, North Korea relies on asymmetric warfare techniques and unconventional weaponry to achieve parity against high-tech enemy forces.[6] North Korea is reported to have developed a wide range of technologies towards this end, such as stealth paint to conceal ground targets,[34] midget submarines and human torpedoes,[35] blinding laser weapons,[36] and probably has a chemical weapons program and is likely to possess a stockpile of chemical weapons.[37] The Korean People's Army operates ZM-87 anti-personnel lasers, which are banned under the United Nations Protocol on Blinding Laser Weapons.[36]

Since the 1980s, North Korea has also been actively developing its own cyber warfare capabilities, and as of 2011 has some 1,000 skilled military hackers.[6][38] The Korean People's Army has also made advances in electronic warfare by developing GPS jammers.[39] Current models include vehicle-mounted jammers with a range of 50 kilometres (31 mi)*-100 kilometres (62 mi)*. Jammers with a range of more than 100 km are being developed, along with electromagnetic pulse bombs.[40] The Korean People's Army has also made attempts to jam South Korean military satellites.[41]

A KPAF Ilyushin Il-76MD strategic airlifter in the mid-2000s, in Air Koryo markings.

Despite the general fuel and ammunition shortages for training, it is estimated that the wartime strategic reserves of food for the army are sufficient to feed the regular troops for 500 days, while fuel and ammunition - amounting to 1.5 million and 1.7 million tonnes respectively - are sufficient to wage a full-scale war for 100 days.[42]

The KPA does not operate aircraft carriers, but has other means of power projection. Korean People's Air Force Il-76MD aircraft provide a strategic airlift capacity of 6,000 troops, while the Navy's sea lift capacity amounts to 15,000 troops.[43] The Strategic Rocket Forces operate more than 1,000 ballistic missiles according to South Korean officials in 2010,[44] although the U.S. Department of Defense reported in 2012 that North Korea has fewer than 200 missile launchers.[37] North Korea acquired 12 Foxtrot class and Golf-II class missile submarines as scrap in 1993.[45] Some analysts suggest that these have either been refurbished with the help of Russian experts or their launch tubes have been reverse-engineered and externally fitted to regular submarines or cargo ships.[46] However GlobalSecurity reports that the submarines were rust-eaten hulks with the launch tubes inactivated under Russian observation before delivery,[47] and the U.S. Department of Defense does not list them as active.[37]

A photograph of Kim Jong Un receiving a briefing from his top generals on March 29, 2013 claimed that the military had a minimum of 40 submarines, 13 landing ships, 6 minesweepers, 27 support vessels and 1,852 aircraft.[48]

The Korean People's Army operates a very large amount of equipment, including 4,100 tanks, 2,100 APCs, 8,500 field artillery pieces, 5,100 multiple rocket launchers,[37] 11,000 air defense guns and some 10,000 MANPADS and anti-tank guided missiles[49] in the Ground force; about 500 vessels in the Navy[37] and 730 combat aircraft in the Air Force,[37] of which 478 are fighters and 180 are bombers.[50] North Korea also has the largest special forces in the world, as well as the largest submarine fleet.[51] The equipment is a mixture of World War II vintage vehicles and small arms, widely proliferated Cold War technology, and more modern Soviet or locally produced weapons.

Military equipment

Weapons

North Korea's variant of the AK-47 is the Type 58A/B (Type 3 AK-47/w. stamped steel folding stock), Type 68A/B (AKM/AKMS), Type 88 (AKS-74)[52][53]

Chemical weapons

The U.S. Department of Defense believes North Korea probably has a chemical weapons program and is likely to possess a stockpile of weapons.[37]

Nuclear weapons

5 MWe experimental reactor at Yongbyon Nuclear Scientific Research Center.

Nuclear tests

On October 9, 2006, the North Korean government first announced that it had successfully fulfilled a nuclear test for the first time. Experts at the United States Geological Survey and other Japanese seismological authorities detected an earthquake with a preliminary estimated magnitude of 4.3 from the site in North Korea, proving the official claims to be true.[54]

North Korea also went on to claim that it had developed a nuclear weapon in 2009. It is widely believed to possess a small stockpile of relatively simple nuclear weapons. The IAEA has met with Ri Je Son, The Director General of the General Department of Atomic Energy (GDAE) of DPRK, to discuss nuclear matters.[55][56] Ri Je Son was also mentioned in this role in 2002 in a United Nations article.[57]

2006 North Korean nuclear test
2009 North Korean nuclear test
2013 North Korean nuclear test

Other

Tonghae Satellite Launching Ground
Ryanggang explosion
Stealth paint
Yongbyon Nuclear Scientific Research Center
Songun
Asymmetric warfare
The launching of Kwangmyŏngsŏng-3 and Kwangmyŏngsŏng-3 Unit 2 in 2012

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b The KPA was actually founded on February 8, 1948. However, in 1978, North Korea established April 25, 1932 as KPA foundation day in recognition of Kim Il Sung’s anti-Japanese guerrilla activities. See “Puk chuyo’gi’nyŏm’il 5-10 nyŏnmada taegyumo yŏlpyŏngsik” (North Korea Holds Large Military Parades for Anniversaries Every 5-10 years), Chosŏn Ilbo, April 25, 2007; Chang Jun-ik, “Pukhan Inmingundaesa” (History of the North Korean Military), Seoul, Sŏmundang, 1991, pp. 19-88; Kim Kwang-su, “Chosŏninmingun’ŭi ch’angsŏlgwa palchŏn, 1945~1990” (Foundation and Development of the Korean People’s Army, 1945~1990), Chapter Two in Kyŏngnam University North Korean Studies Graduate School, Pukhan’gunsamunje’ŭi chaejomyŏng (The Military of North Korea: A New Look), Seoul, Hanul Academy, 2006, pp. 63-78.
  2. ^ International Institute for Strategic Studies (3 February 2010). Hackett, James (ed.). The Military Balance 2010. London: Routledge. ISBN 1-85743-557-5.
  3. ^ A Brief And Fascinating Guide To North Korea's Economy
  4. ^ Military Strength of North Korea
  5. ^ World Wide Military Expenditures
  6. ^ a b c d e Bradley Martin, Bradley Martin (25 March 2013). "The Regime That Will Not Die: The North Korean Hybrid Threat". International Affairs Review. Retrieved 26 March 2013.
  7. ^ "North Korea weapons aftermath". crisiswatch.net. {{cite web}}: External link in |publisher= (help)
  8. ^ Template:Ko icon UNFPA (1 October 2009). "한반도 인구 7천400만명 시대 임박". United Nations. Retrieved 21 November 2012. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  9. ^ http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/sources/census/2010_PHC/North_Korea/Final%20national%20census%20report.pdf
  10. ^ James M. Minnich, The North Korean People’s Army, p. 36
  11. ^ Homer T. Hodge, North Korea’s Military Strategy, Parameters, Spring 2003, pp. 68-81.
  12. ^ "The Evolution of North Korean Military Thought". North Korea Country Study. Library of Congress Country Studies. 1993.
  13. ^ Federation of American Scientists, Korean Peoples' Army, accessed February 2008
  14. ^ GlobalSecurity, Korean Peoples' Army, accessed February 2008
  15. ^ United States Department of Defense Virtual Information Center, North Korea Primer accessed June 27, 2011
  16. ^ a b Kim Jong-un Hailed as Supreme Commander of North Korea’s Military (NYT 12/24/11)
  17. ^ ISIS Fast Facts on North Korea; accessed 21 April 2009
  18. ^ "Report on Implementation of 2009 Budget and 2010 Budget". Korean Central News Agency. 09. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= and |year= / |date= mismatch (help); Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  19. ^ Military Balance, 2004-2005, pp. 353-357.
  20. ^ Scobell, Going Out of Business, p. 14, Table 2, p. 17.
  21. ^ UN Listing of KOMID and Ryonbong
  22. ^ "Relations with the Third World". North Korea Country Study. Library of Congress Country Studies. 1993.
  23. ^ "Angola - Foreign Influences". Country-data.com. Retrieved 17 August 2012.
  24. ^ Asia Times, 18 August 2006, Richard M Bennett Missiles and madness.
  25. ^ Vietnamese Air-to-Air Victories, Part 1
  26. ^ Vietnamese Air-to-Air Victories, Part 2 (ACIG.org)
  27. ^ Far Eastern Air-to-Air Victories (ACIG.org)
  28. ^ Pribbenow, Merle (2003). "The 'Ology War: technology and ideology in the defense of Hanoi, 1967". Journal of Military History (67:1): 183. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  29. ^ Farquhar, Scott. Back to Basics: A Study of the Second Lebanon War and Operation CAST LEAD (PDF). Combat Studies Institute Press. p. 9.
  30. ^ Template:Cote web
  31. ^ Bermudez (2001), pg 93–95.
  32. ^ Bermudez (2001), pg 101.
  33. ^ "Air Defense". North Korea Country Study. Library of Congress Country Studies. 1993.
  34. ^ North Korea 'develops stealth paint to camouflage fighter jets', The Daily Telegraph, 23 August 2010
  35. ^ North Korea's Human Torpedoes, DailyNK, 06-05-2010
  36. ^ a b North Korea's military aging but sizable, CNN, 25 November 2010
  37. ^ a b c d e f g Military and Security Developments Involving the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (PDF) (Report). U.S. Department of Defense. 2012. Retrieved 23 May 2013.
  38. ^ North Korea’s Powerful Cyber Warfare Capabilities, 4 May 2011
  39. ^ "North Korea Appears Capable of Jamming GPS Receivers". globalsecurity.org. 7 October 2010. Retrieved 8 September 2012.
  40. ^ "N.Korea Developing High-Powered GPS Jammer". The Chosun Ilbo. 7 September 2011. Retrieved 8 September 2012.
  41. ^ "Satellite in Alleged NK Jamming Attack". Daily NK. 15 November 2012. Retrieved 12 December 2012.
  42. ^ Lawmaker Points to 1 Million Tons of War Rice, DailyNK, 7 April 2011
  43. ^ 2009 North Korea Country Study, p. 252
  44. ^ "North Korea has 1,000 missiles, South says". Reuters. 17 March 2010.
  45. ^ "North Korea's New Missiles". International Assessment and Strategy Center. 20 September 2004. Retrieved 8 September 2012.
  46. ^ "North Korea Develops a Submarine Missile With Shooting Range 2,500km". DailyNK. 2 July 2007. Retrieved 8 September 2012.
  47. ^ "SSG Golf Class". GlobalSecurity. Retrieved 14 June 2013.
  48. ^ "N. Korea's photo offers glimpse of major weapons". Yonhap. 29 March 2013. Retrieved 29 March 2013.
  49. ^ Армии стран мира : К, soldiering.ru
  50. ^ Order of Battle – North Korea, MilAviaPress
  51. ^ North Korea Country Study (2009), Library of Congress, pp.288-293 (on PDF reader)
  52. ^ US Department of Defense, North Korea Country Handbook 1997, Appendix A: Equipment Recognition, PPSH 1943 SUBMACHINEGUN (TYPE-50 CHINA/MODEL-49 DPRK), p. A-79.
  53. ^ US Department of Defense, North Korea Country Handbook 1997, Appendix A: Equipment Recognition, TYPE-68 (AKM) ASSAULT RIFLE, p. A-77.
  54. ^ Template:En icon Magnitude 4.3—North Korea (2006 October 09 01:35:28 UTC) (Report). United States Geological Survey (USGS). 9 October 2006. Retrieved 1 December 2010.
  55. ^ http://www.iaea.org/About/Policy/GC/GC56/GC56Documents/English/gc56-11_en.pdf
  56. ^ Nuke agency wary of N. Korea's invitation - Washington Times
  57. ^ United Nations News Centre - DPR of Korea informs IAEA of intent to lift 'freeze' on nuclear power plants

References

Further reading

  • Bermudez, Joseph S. (1998). North Korean special forces. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-55750-066-5. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  • Boik, William A. (2008). Orders, Decorations, and Medals of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. Springfield, VA: DBMPress.com. ISBN 978-0-615-19087-7. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)